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Amines – Organic Nitrogen Compounds
Organic derivatives of ammonia, NH3, Nitrogen atom with a lone pair of electrons, making amines both basic and nucleophilic Occur in plants and animals
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Why this Chapter? Amines and carbonyl compounds are the most abundant and have rich chemistry In addition to proteins and nucleic acids, a majority of pharmaceutical agents contain amine functional groups
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24.1 Naming Amines Alkyl-substituted (alkylamines) or aryl-substituted (arylamines) Classified: 1° (RNH2), methyl (CH3NH2), 2° (R2NH), 3° (R3N)
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Quaternary Ammonium Ions
A nitrogen atom with four attached groups is positively charged Compounds are quaternary ammonium salts
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IUPAC Names – Simple Amines
For simple amines, the suffix -amine is added to the name of the alkyl substituent
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IUPAC Names – “-amine” Suffix
The suffix -amine can be used in place of the final -e in the name of the parent compound
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IUPAC Names – Amines With More Than One Functional Group
Consider the NH2 as an amino substituent on the parent molecule
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IUPAC Names – Multiple Alkyl Groups
Symmetrical secondary and tertiary amines are named by adding the prefix di- or tri- to the alkyl group
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IUPAC Names – Multiple, Different Alkyl Groups
Named as N-substituted primary amines Largest alkyl group is the parent name, and other alkyl groups are considered N-substituents
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24.2 Properties of Amines Bonding to N is similar to that in ammonia
N is sp3-hybridized C–N–C bond angles are close to 109° tetrahedral value
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Chirality Is Possible (But Not Observed)
An amine with three different substituents on nitrogen is chiral (in principle but not in practice): the lone pair of electrons is the fourth substituent Most amines that have 3 different substituents on N are not resolved because the molecules interconvert by pyramidal inversion
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Amines Form H-Bonds Amines with fewer than five carbons are water-soluble Primary and secondary amines form hydrogen bonds, increasing their boiling points
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24.3 Basicity of Amines The lone pair of electrons on nitrogen makes amines basic and nucleophilic They react with acids to form acid–base salts and they react with electrophiles
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Relative Basicity Amines are stronger bases than alcohols, ethers, or water Amines establish an equilibrium with water in which the amine becomes protonated and hydroxide is produced The most convenient way to measure the basicity of an amine (RNH2) is to look at the acidity of the corresponding ammonium ion (RNH3+) High pKa → weaker acid and stronger conjugate base.
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General Patterns of Basicity
Table 24.1: pKa values of ammonium ions Most simple alkylammmonium ions have pKa's of 10 to 11 Arylamines and heterocyclic aromatic amines are considerably less basic than alkylamines (conjugate acid pKa 5 or less)
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Amides Amides (RCONH2) in general are not proton acceptors except in very strong acid The C=O group is strongly electron-withdrawing, making the N a very weak base Addition of a proton occurs on O but this destroys the double bond character of C=O as a requirement of stabilization by N
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24.4 Basicity of Substituted Arylamines
The N lone-pair electrons in arylamines are delocalized by interaction with the aromatic ring electron system and are less able to accept H+ than are alkylamines
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Substituted Arylamines
Can be more basic or less basic than aniline Electron-donating substituents (such as CH3, NH2, OCH3) increase the basicity of the corresponding arylamine Electron-withdrawing substituents (such as Cl, NO2, CN) decrease arylamine basicity
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24.6 Synthesis of Amines Arylamines are prepared from nitration of an aromatic compound and reduction of the nitro group Reduction by catalytic hydrogenation over platinum is suitable if no other groups can be reduced Iron, zinc, tin, and tin(II) chloride are effective in acidic solution
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SN2 Reactions of Alkyl Halides
Ammonia and other amines are good nucleophiles
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Uncontrolled Multiple Alkylation
Primary, secondary, and tertiary amines all have similar reactivity, the initially formed monoalkylated substance undergoes further reaction to yield a mixture of products
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Selective Preparation of Primary Amines: the Azide Synthesis
Azide ion, N3 displaces a halide ion from a primary or secondary alkyl halide to give an alkyl azide, RN3 Alkyl azides are not nucleophilic (but they are explosive) Reduction gives the primary amine
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Gabriel Synthesis of Primary Amines
A phthalimide alkylation for preparing a primary amine from an alkyl halide The N-H in imides (CONHCO) can be removed by KOH followed by alkylation and hydrolysis
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Reductive Amination of Aldehydes and Ketones
Treatment of an aldehyde or ketone with ammonia or an amine in the presence of a reducing agent
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Reductive Amination Is Versatile
Ammonia, primary amines, and secondary amines yield primary, secondary, and tertiary amines, respectively
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Mechanism of Reductive Amination
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24.7 Reactions of Amines Alkylation and acylation have already been presented
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Hofmann Elimination Converts amines into alkenes
NH2 is very a poor leaving group so it converted to an alkylammonium ion, which is a good leaving group
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Silver Oxide Is Used for the Elimination Step
Exchanges hydroxide ion for iodide ion in the quaternary ammonium salt, thus providing the base necessary to cause elimination
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Orientation in Hofmann Elimination
We would expect that the more highly substituted alkene product predominates in the E2 reaction of an alkyl halide (Zaitsev's rule) However, the less highly substituted alkene predominates in the Hofmann elimination due to the large size of the trialkylamine leaving group The base must abstract a hydrogen from the most sterically accessible, least hindered position
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Steric Effects Control the Orientation
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24.8 Reactions of Arylamines
Amino substituents are strongly activating, ortho- and para-directing groups in electrophilic aromatic substitution reactions Reactions are controlled by conversion to amide
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Arylamines Are Not Useful for Friedel-Crafts Reactions
The amino group forms a Lewis acid–base complex with the AlCl3 catalyst, preventing further reaction Therefore we use the corresponding amide
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Diazonium Salts: The Sandmeyer Reaction
Primary arylamines react with HNO2, yielding stable arenediazonium salts
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Uses of Arenediazonium Salts
The N2 group can be replaced by a nucleophile
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Preparation of Aryl Halides
Reaction of an arenediazonium salt with CuCl or CuBr gives aryl halides (Sandmeyer Reaction) Aryl iodides form from reaction with NaI without a copper(I) salt
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Aryl Nitriles and Carboxylic Acids
An arenediazonium salt and CuCN yield the nitrile, ArCN, which can be hydrolyzed to ArCOOH
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Formation of Phenols (ArOH)
From reaction of the arenediazonium salt with copper(I) oxide in an aqueous solution of copper(II) nitrate
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Reduction to a Hydrocarbon
By treatment of a diazonium salt with hypophosphorous acid, H3PO2
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Mechanism of Diazonium Replacement
Through radical (rather than polar or ionic) pathways
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Diazonium Coupling Reactions
Arenediazonium salts undergo a coupling reaction with activated aromatic rings, such as phenols and arylamines, to yield brightly colored azo compounds, ArN=NAr
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How Diazonium Coupling Occurs
The electrophilic diazonium ion reacts with the electron-rich ring of a phenol or arylamine Usually occurs at the para position but goes ortho if para is blocked
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Azo Dyes Azo-coupled products have extended conjugation that lead to low energy electronic transitions that occur in visible light (dyes)
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24.10 Spectroscopy of Amines -Infrared
Characteristic N–H stretching absorptions 3300 to 3500 cm1 Amine absorption bands are sharper and less intense than hydroxyl bands Protonated amines show an ammonium band in the range 2200 to 3000 cm1
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Examples of Infrared Spectra
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Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
N–H hydrogens appear as broad signals without clear-cut coupling to neighboring C–H hydrogens In D2O exchange of N–D for N–H occurs, and the N–H signal disappears
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Chemical Shift Effects
Hydrogens on C next to N and absorb at lower field than alkane hydrogens N-CH3 gives a sharp three-H singlet at 2.2 to 2.6
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13C NMR Carbons next to amine N are slightly deshielded - about 20 ppm downfield from where they would absorb in an alkane
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Mass Spectrometry A compound with an odd number of nitrogen atoms has an odd-numbered molecular weight and a corresponding parent ion Alkylamines cleave at the C–C bond nearest the nitrogen to yield an alkyl radical and a nitrogen-containing cation
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Mass Spectrum of N-Ethylpropylamine
The two modes of a cleavage give fragment ions at m/z = 58 and m/z = 72.
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